Recreation and Places
of Interest
Kansas has a wide variety of interesting places
to visit. They range from the fossil beds and
unusual geological formations such as Rock City,
on the High Plains, to the wheel ruts still discernible
along the old Santa Fe and Oregon trails, to
the many historic sites and buildings found throughout
the state.
There are also numerous facilities for outdoor
recreation in the state. Nearly every state park
and recreation area in Kansas either includes
or adjoins a water area, and almost all of them
offer facilities for boating, fishing, and swimming.
In addition, many of the state-administered park
areas also have facilities for picnicking, camping,
hiking, and horseback riding. Three national
wildlife refuges are administered by the federal
government: the Flint Hills refuge in the east,
the Kirwin refuge in the north central part of
the state, and the Quivira refuge in south central
Kansas. Cheyenne Bottoms, near Great Bend, and
other wildlife areas are administered by the
state.
National Parks
Brown v. Board of Education National Historic
Site in Topeka commemorates the landmark decision
by the Supreme Court of the United States,
which in 1954 overturned racial segregation
in the nation’s education systems. The
site is located at the Monroe Elementary School,
which was attended by Linda Brown whose lawsuit
against the school system brought about the
supreme court ruling.
Other historic sites in Kansas preserve military
forts used during the westward expansion. Fort
Larned National Historic Site was an outpost
established midway along the Santa Fe Trail to
protect travelers and mail deliveries. Its stone
buildings are among the best-preserved relics
of the western wars with Native Americans. Fort
Scott National Historic Site, first established
by the United States Army to enforce the peace
among settlers and Native Americans, played a
role in the Mexican War (1846-1848) and was reopened
during the Civil War. Fort Leavenworth, in northeastern
Kansas near Leavenworth, dates from 1827 and
is the oldest active U.S. military post west
of the Mississippi River. It is the seat of the
U.S. Army General Staff College. Fort Riley was
established as a cavalry post early in the 1850s.
It is also an active post. The first Capitol
of Kansas lies within Fort Riley in northeastern
Kansas. The building, located at what was then
called Pawnee, served very briefly as the seat
of the territorial government in July 1855. It
is now maintained as a public museum. Also at
Fort Riley is the United States Cavalry Museum.
The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve protects
another kind of historic resource, the native
grasslands that once covered a large portion
of the interior of the United States. The preserve,
dedicated in 1998, contains 4,409 hectares (10,894
acres) of prairie land located in the Flint Hills
area of east-central Kansas. The National Park
Service administers the preserve, which is part
of the largest tract of tallgrass prairie still
remaining on the continent.
State Parks
There are 25 state parks and recreation areas
in Kansas and many historic sites. The largest
recreation area is centered on Milford Lake,
located in the central part of the state. Other
large state parks include Fall River, Toronto,
and Elk City, all located in southeastern Kansas;
Cheney, Kanopolis, and Sand Hills, all in the
central part of the state; Clinton, Perry, and
Tuttle Creek, all in northeastern Kansas; Prairie
Dog, Cedar Bluff, and Lake Scott, which are in
the northwestern part of the state; and Glen
Elder, in north central Kansas.
Pawnee Rock Park, a historic site in central
Kansas near Great Bend, contains a sandstone
mass 24 m (80 ft) high that was one of the most
famous landmarks on the Santa Fe Trail. The John
Brown Museum, at Osawatomie in eastern Kansas,
includes the log cabin where the famous abolitionist
often stayed. The site of a former Pawnee village,
now containing an archaeological museum, lies
in northern Kansas near Republic. The Hollenberg
Pony Express Station, in northeastern Kansas
near Hanover, is claimed to be the only pony
express station in the country that has been
preserved in its original, unaltered condition.
It houses a small pioneer museum. Other state
historic sites are the Iowa, Sac, and Fox Mission
at Highland, the Shawnee Mission in Johnson County,
the Kaw Indian Mission at Council Grove, Marais
des Cygnes Massacre Memorial Park in Linn County,
the Fort Hays Historical Park at Hays, and the
Edward H. Funston House near Iola, home to two
prominent Kansans.
Museums
Noted collections of European, American, and
Asian art are housed in the University of Kansas’s
Spencer Museum of Art in Lawrence. The Wichita
Art Museum, the largest art museum in the state,
is known for its collection of American art.
The Natural History Museum maintained by the
University of Kansas contains exhibits of birds,
mammals, and fossil skeletons.
The museum of the Kansas State Historical Society
houses an extensive collection of archaeological
relics and materials from the 19th and early
20th centuries. The society also maintains a
number of the state’s historic sites and
monuments. In addition, there are local historical
museums and historic buildings in a number of
Kansas communities. The Eisenhower Center at
Abilene houses numerous mementos of the former
U.S. president’s long career in government
service.
Other Places to Visit
Many of the places of interest in Kansas are
closely associated with 19th-century history,
including Old Front Street and the Boot Hill
Museum, in Dodge City, which is a replica of
the city’s notorious Front Street as
it appeared in the late 1870s. There are similar
front street reproductions in Abilene and Wichita.
The Dalton Museum in Coffeyville preserves
relics of the notorious bank robbers, the Dalton
Gang.
A number of museums and buildings in the state
commemorate famous Kansans. In Medicine Lodge
is the Kansas home of the ardent prohibitionist
Carry Nation. Near Athol is the one-room cabin
home of Dr. Brewster H. Higley, a pioneer physician
who wrote the words to “Home on the Range,” now
the state song. The famous aviator Amelia Earhart
was born in 1897 in a white frame house still
standing in Atchison. Perhaps the most noted
person associated with Kansas is former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower, who grew up in Abilene.
Adjoining his boyhood home is the Eisenhower
Museum, which houses mementos of Eisenhower’s
life and souvenirs of his presidency. The Dwight
D. Eisenhower Library, opposite the museum, contains
papers dating from his years in office.
Of scientific interest are the chalk beds of
western Kansas, one of the richest sources of
fossils in the country. In the Sternberg Memorial
Museum at Fort Hays State University, in Hays
in west central Kansas, is an outstanding collection
of fossils taken from these deposits. Numerous
fossils of reptiles have also been unearthed
in northwestern Kansas near Oakley. The Kansas
Cosmosphere and Space Center, in Hutchinson,
boasts a major collection of space artifacts.
Places of geological interest in Kansas include
Monument Rocks, Rock City, and the grass-covered
sand dunes located just south of the Arkansas
River in Finney and Kearny counties.
The Bartlett Arboretum, near Belle Plaine, has
several thousand kinds of trees, shrubs, and
flowers growing in a formal garden. In Gage Park
in Topeka is the Reinisch Rose Garden.
Source: MSN
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